Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Acceptation

WORD OF THE DAY

acceptation / noun / ak-sep-TAY-shun

Definition
1a: acceptance
1b: favorable reception or approval
2: a generally accepted meaning of a word or understanding of a concept

Examples
"About 40 fine arts students filled out a two-page application to be a part of the project, Rodriguez said.... Some have done commissioned work and sold their art on Etsy. One received an automatic acceptation to a prestigious art school in Chicago on National Portfolio Day last fall."
— Laura Gutschke, The Abilene (Texas) Reporter-News, 8 Apr. 2018

"For its primary definition of 'money,' the same source states, 'In usual and ordinary acceptation it means gold, silver, or paper money used as circulating medium of exchange, and does not embrace notes, bonds, evidences of debt, or other personal or real estate.'"
— Tom Egan, The Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly, 1 June 2017

Did You Know?
Acceptation is older than its synonym acceptance; it first appeared in print in the 15th century, whereas acceptance makes a 16th-century appearance.
Grammarian H. W. Fowler insisted in 1926 that acceptation and acceptance were not actually synonymous (he preferred to reserve acceptation for the "accepted meaning" use), but the earliest meaning of acceptation was indeed acceptance.
Both words descend from the Anglo-French word accepter ("to accept"), but acceptation took an extra step. Anglo-French added the -ation ending, which was changed to form acceptacioun in Middle English. (English embraced the present-day -ation ending later.)
Acceptance simply comes from accepter plus the Anglo-French -ance.

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